Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: KEGG:D02011 (FAD)
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1. The effects of various inhibitors and activators on the azo- and nitro-reductases of Moniezia expansa have been studied. Both reductions were partially inhibited by FAD, FMN, riboflavin, allopurinol, dicoumarol, 5-nitro-2-furaldehyde, azide and cyanide at 1 mM. Both reactions were stimulated by hypoxanthine. Menadione, nitrofurantoin, SKF 525-A (2-diethylaminoethyl 2,2-diphenylvalerate) and fluoride were without effect. 2. Xanthine- and aldehyde-oxidase activities were not detected in the enzyme preparation. 3. The substrate specificity of the azo- and nitro-reductases were determined. Azobenzene, 4-dimethylamino-azobenzene and 1,2-dimethyl-4-(4-carboxyphenylazo)-5-hydroxybenzene, nitrobenzene, 4-nitrohippuric acid and the isomers of nitrophenol, nitroanisole, nitrobenzoic acid, nitrobenzaldehyde and nitrobenzyl alcohol were reduced. Nitrobenzaldehyde isomers were not reduced to the alcohols and the coumaric acids were not reduced to the phenylpropionic acids. 4. The products of azo- and nitro-reduction were the corresponding amines; hydroxylamino- and hydrazo-compounds were not detected. 5. The pH optima and cofactor requirements were the same for both azo- and nitro-reduction. Neither reaction was inhibited by oxygen.
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PMID:Azo- and nitro-reductases of the cestode Moniezia expansa. Substrate specificity, reaction products and the effects of flavins and other compounds. 1 14

Native FAD was removed from chicken liver xanthine dehydrogenase (XDH) and replaced with a number of artificial flavins of different redox potential. Dithionite titration of the 2-thio-FAD- or 4-thio-FAD (high potential)-containing enzymes showed that the first center to be reduced was the flavin. With native enzyme, iron-sulfur centers are the first to be reduced. With the low potential flavin, 6-OH-FAD, the enzyme-bound flavin was the last center to be reduced in reductive titration with xanthine. These shifts in the reduction profile support the hypothesis that the distribution of reducing equivalents in multi-center oxidation-reduction enzymes of this type is determined by the relative potentials of the centers. The reaction of molecular oxygen with fully reduced 2-thio-FAD XDH or 4-thio-FAD XDH resulted in 5 electron eq being released in a fast phase and one in a slow phase. Reduction of these enzymes by xanthine was limited at a rate comparable to that for the release of urate from native XDH. Xanthine/O2 turnover with these enzymes (and native XDH) resulted in approximately 40-50% of the xanthine reducing equivalents appearing as superoxide. Steady state turnover experiments involving all modified flavin-containing enzymes, as well as native enzyme, showed that shifting the flavin potential either positive or negative relative to FAD caused a decrease in catalytic activity in the xanthine/NAD reductase reaction. In the case of the xanthine/O2 reductase activity, there is no simple obvious relationship between the activity and the redox potential of the reconstituted flavin.
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PMID:Reactivity of chicken liver xanthine dehydrogenase containing modified flavins. 253 67

Xanthine-NAD and NADH-methylene blue oxidoreductase activities of chicken liver xanthine dehydrogenase were inactivated by incubation with 5'-[p-(fluorosulfonyl)benzoyl]adenosine (5'-FSBA), an active site directed reagent for nucleotide binding sites. The inactivation reaction displayed pseudo-first-order kinetics. A double-reciprocal plot of inactivation velocity vs. 5'-FSBA concentration showed that 5'-FSBA and enzyme formed a complex prior to inactivation. NAD protected the enzyme from inactivation by 5'-FSBA in a competitive fashion. The modified enzyme had the same xanthine-dichlorophenolindophenol and xanthine-O2 oxidoreductase activities as the native enzyme, and on addition of xanthine to the modified enzyme, bleaching of the spectrum occurred in the visible region. The amount of radioactivity incorporated into the enzyme by incubation with [14C]-5'-FSBA was parallel to the loss of xanthine-NAD oxidoreductase activity, and the stoichiometry was 1 mol/mol of enzyme-bound FAD for complete inactivation. These results indicated that 5'-FSBA modified specifically the binding site for NAD of chicken liver xanthine dehydrogenase. The incorporated radioactivity was released slowly from 14C-labeled enzyme by incubation with dithiothreitol with concomitant restoration of catalytic activity. The modified residue responsible for inactivation was identified as a tyrosine.
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PMID:Evidence for the existence of a tyrosyl residue in the nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide binding site of chicken liver xanthine dehydrogenase. 347 29

Aldehyde dehydrogenase from Pseudomonas testosteroni was purified to homogeneity. The enzyme has a pH optimum of 8.2, uses a wide range of aldehydes as substrates and cationic dyes (Wurster's blue, phenazine methosulphate and thionine), but not anionic dyes (ferricyanide and 2.6-dichloroindophenol), NAD(P)+ or O2, as electron acceptors. Haem c and pyrroloquinoline quinone appeared to be absent but the common cofactors of molybdenum hydroxylases were present. Xanthine was not a substrate and allopurinol was not an inhibitor. Alcohols were inhibitors only when turnover of the enzyme occurred in aldehyde conversion. The enzyme has a relative molecular mass of 186,000, consists of two subunits of equal size (Mr 92,000), and 1 enzyme molecule contains 1 FAD, 1 molybdopterin cofactor, 4 Fe and 4 S. It is a novel type of NAD(P)+-independent aldehyde dehydrogenase since its catalytic and physicochemical properties are quite different from those reported for already known aldehyde-converting enzymes like haemoprotein aldehyde dehydrogenase (EC 1.2.99.3), quino-protein alcohol dehydrogenases (EC 1.1.99.8) and molybdenum hydroxylases.
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PMID:NAD(P)+-independent aldehyde dehydrogenase from Pseudomonas testosteroni. A novel type of molybdenum-containing hydroxylase. 360 27

The molybdenum-containing iron-sulfur flavoprotein xanthine dehydrogenase from the anaerobic bacterium Veillonella atypica has been purified approximately 800-fold with a yield of approximately 40% and a specific activity of approximately 70 micromol ferricyanide reduced x min(-1) x mg protein(-1) with xanthine as electron donor, which corresponds to approximately 30 micromol xanthine oxidized x min(-1) x mg protein(-1) with methylene blue as electron acceptor. The 129-kDa enzyme was a non-covalent heterotrimer with large (82.4 kDa), medium (28.5 kDa) and small (18.4 kDa) subunits. The N-termini of the small and medium polypeptides of V. atypica xanthine dehydrogenase and the corresponding domains of eukaryotic xanthine dehydrogenases were similar, whereas the N-terminus of the large polypeptide was unrelated to eukaryotic xanthine dehydrogenases. The enzyme contained 0.86 atoms Mo, 1.75 atoms Fe, 1.61 atoms acid-labile sulfur and 0.68 molecules FAD/molecule, which corresponds to a 1:2.0:1.9:0.8 molar ratio. Acid hydrolysis revealed 0.95 mol CMP and 0.80 mol AMP/mol xanthine dehydrogenase. After treatment of the enzyme with iodoacetamide, di(carboxamidomethyl)molybdopterin cytosine dinucleotide was identified, which indicates that molybdopterin cytosine dinucleotide is the organic portion of the V. atypica xanthine dehydrogenase molybdenum cofactor. The enzyme and its molybdenum cofactor occurred in a 1:1 molar ratio. Xanthine dehydrogenases from eukaryotic sources are characterized by a domain structure and the presence of duplicate copies of two types of [2Fe-2S) clusters. In contrast, the xanthine dehydrogenase from V. atypica had a heterotrimeric subunit structure and a single [2Fe-2S] cluster. In addition, the enzyme indicates the presence of a molybdopterin dinucleotide as a constituent of a xanthine dehydrogenase molybdenum cofactor.
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PMID:Characterization of xanthine dehydrogenase from the anaerobic bacterium Veillonella atypica and identification of a molybdopterin-cytosine-dinucleotide-containing molybdenum cofactor. 870 91

Purine hydroxylase (PH) from Clostridium purinolyticum contains a labile selenium cofactor and belongs to a class of enzymes known as the selenium-dependent molybdenum hydroxylases. The presence of approximately 1.1 mol of molybdenum, 0.87 mol of selenium, and 3.3 mol of iron per mol of PH was determined by atomic absorption spectroscopy. Enzyme preparations with lower than stoichiometric amounts of selenium exhibited correspondingly lower hydroxylase activities. Bound FAD, 1 mol per mol enzyme, was confirmed by UV-vis and fluorescence spectroscopy. CMP, released by acid hydrolysis, indicated the presence of a molybdopterin cytosine dinucleotide cofactor. The fully active PH utilized NADP(+) as an electron acceptor, and kinetic analysis revealed an optimal k(cat) of 412 s(-1) using hypoxanthine as the hydroxylase substrate. Xanthine, NAD(+), and NADPH had no significant effect on this reaction rate. A selenium-independent NADPH oxidase activity was exhibited by native PH. Electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy revealed the presence of a Mo(V) desulfo signal, FAD radical, and 2Fe-2S centers in hypoxanthine-reduced PH. No hyperfine coupling of selenium, using (77)Se isotope-enriched PH, was observed in any of the EPR active signals studied. The appearance of the desulfo signal suggests that the ligands of Mo in selenium-dependent molybdenum hydroxylases are different from the well-studied mammalian xanthine oxidoreductases (XOR) and aldehyde oxidoreductases (AOR) and suggests a unique role for Se in catalysis.
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PMID:Cofactor determination and spectroscopic characterization of the selenium-dependent purine hydroxylase from Clostridium purinolyticum. 1450 89